The new
Savage Axis, originaly marketed as the "Edge," is a remarkable rifle in several ways, the reason I'm compelled to
remark about it. The entry-level rifle market is one I generally don't talk
about a great deal. Although we sometimes have a tendency to price and shop
firearms themselves mercilessly, the firearm itself is such a tiny part of the
overall cost of ownership once you include ammunition, range fees, optics,
gasoline, hunting tags, hunting trips and so forth the cost of the firearm
itself can be considered of little consequence measured against the tapestry of
the full picture. Center-fire hunting rifles, in particular, if given
reasonable care and attention don't wear out in a lifetime of hunting.

At the
same time, affordability is important and is what a large portion of consumers
want. The future of hunting and shooting sports is not that of white-haired,
grumpy old men. The future of hunting and shooting relies far more on access,
cost of entry, and startup costs for younger shooters. What do you say to
fathers and mothers of this country that necessarily must pay close attention
to the family budget when they want to have family target shooting, family
hunts, and family outdoor adventures? When Dad wants to take his kids hunting
and likely picks up a goodly portion of the initial starting-out costs, just
what do you say to Dad? I come from a family with five kids myself, so when
family mortgage payments, health care costs, food, and utility bills are on the
table, just where does the family shooting sports money come from? It isn't
always easy for young parents with younger kids.

Like any
other sport, you hardly know what level of interest you have in it until
you try it. If the family budget does not allow for it, well you just aren't
likely to have an opportunity to get involved in the first place. Of course,
Dad wants to get out in the field with his kids, for it was this same scenario
that allowed Dad, Grandpa, and Great-Grandpa to get out there, learn, and progress
in decades gone past. There are a few grumpy old men out there hunting and
shooting alone or with other grumpy old men these days. I suspect they would
feel a lot younger and would be far less grumpy if they were hunting and
shooting with their kids and grand-kids. I hunt and shoot a lot with my father
who is eighty-two years old. Dad is neither grumpy or acts old. Perhaps there
is a good reason for that?

Apparently,
around fourteen months ago or so, distributors and dealers told Savage Arms
that what their customers wanted was good, yet affordable, rifles and that they felt
there was currently a significant void in this marketplace. In what might well
be some sort of a record from concept to finished product, in a little over a
year the Savage Edge/Axis project was a reality.

My first
reaction was “Why is this gun a
Savage?” After all, the Stevens brand has distinguished itself as being
the “Definition of Value” and if there is a rifle today that reflects value,
the Axis is surely it. Though Savage Arms has been around since 1894, the
current Savage Arms management has it roots in 1988. It is over the last
twenty-two years that Savage Arms has earned its reputation to where now
“Savage Arms” on a product has a level of commercial magnetism it distinctly
did not have in 1988.

It is risky business putting the company name on a new product, for a failing or
substandard model necessarily tarnished the good name that took so long to
build in the first place. It happens with great regularity; the examples are
easy to find. Whether the recalled and ultimately discontinued Remington 710,
the Sako/Tikka rifle recall, the Knight Rifles Revolution recall, or the S&W
i-Bolt recall, problems such as these tend to have long-lasting effects to the
detriment of brands that once enjoyed good reputations, or newcomers to the
rifle market that are attempting to form a reputation. When have earned an
enviable reputation, such as Savage has, you have a lot to live up to.

After pondering the subtleties of the entry-level rifle market and branding, I'm
convinced that Savage made the right call in branding the Axis a Savage. The
model of Axis is sufficiently distanced from the traditional Savage rifle
nomenclature, so there can be no confusion. Savage rifles have continually been
rated as exceedingly good values in general, outshooting models sold at many
times their price tags, so the notion of value and Savage Arms branded product
has largely been viewed as compatible, if not a given. Based on the 1/2 MOA
performance of the tested Savage Axis .223, it certainly shoots like a Savage
and will do nothing but continue and enhance the Savage “Definition of
Accuracy” motto. There are still many, many rifles out there that cannot
average even two-inch 100 yards. Savage does not not make a single rifle that
shoots that loose that I know of, with even their 10ML-II muzzleloader, their
220F slug guns, and their rimfires often shooting well inside an inch at 100
yards.

After completing my own review of the Axis in .223 Remington, I became aware of other
reviews of the Axis/Edge. One was in .243 Winchester, netting 1/2 inch 100 yard
groups and another in .22-250 that shot 1/2 to 3/4 MOA at 100 yards. It seems
apparent that the 1/2 inch accuracy I observed isn't all that unusual.

In the review, I commented on features of the Savage Axis that are desirable such as
the metal sling studs compared to weaker molded in studs that are not as
strong. You'll find molded-in sling eyelets on models such as the Smith &
Wesson i-Bolt, for example. The additional rub is that the basic black i-Bolt
hits $553 MSRP as opposed to the $329 Savage Axis, not at all a trivial spread. While the i-Bolt is
an entry-level rifle, it isn't priced like one.

The loading port on the Axis is similar to the loading port size on some Savage
target rifles at .64 inches high by 6.41 inches long. I found it to be generous
with no ejection problems at all. The oval ejection port, the detachable
magazines fitted to cartridge and the recoil lug embedded in the stock that
nests into the barrel all bear some semblance to the approach taken by the
Tikka T3. Again, at MSRP of $595 or so for a Tikka T3, it may well be considered
an entry level rifle, but it sure isn't priced like one.

My
friend, the erudite Chuck Hawks, has used both the Tikka and the i-Bolt as his
poster children for cheap rifles. More often than not, I tend to agree with
Chuck. An entry-level rifle priced at $600 is nobody's bargain. Even the
Mossberg ATR, despite its molded-in sling attachments and side-safety, at least
comes in at $452 MSRP in matte black, ranging up to $518 MSRP for a few of its
scoped combo. Again, price is what you pay but value is what you actually get.
Dropping to $329 for the basic Savage Axis is no small feat. Finding $120 of MSRP
to remove without taking away what a good rifle must do and must be is tricky
business, requiring surgical selections from engineering and production.

Distinctions are made between hunting rifles and target rifles, as they are between hunting
shotguns and clays guns. To the younger or budding shooter, no such luxury of
dedicated use exists. When I was a kid, the most often used .22 was a Marlin
model 56 Levermatic with a seven-shot detachable magazine which entered the
family as a gift from Mom to Dad. It was used for everything you can imagine a
.22 rimfire rifle as being used for. The same went for our High Standard .22
autoloading pistol, a Mauser 98 actioned .270, a 38-55, and a large number of
shotguns. None were dedicated-use guns; there wasn't a great largesse of extra
cash around to begin to consider that. Nevertheless, all were used for hunting,
plinking, and target shooting. I won my first turkey shoot at trap over forty
years ago with a High Standard Supermatic Trophy 20 gauge, not realizing back
then than it wasn't a clays guns, much less a trap gun, and that a 20 gauge
isn't supposed to be ideal for either. It did a fine job back then on doves,
ducks, and pheasants as well. I also was unaware that I needed to use a
waterfowl gun for waterfowl at the time. So was the waterfowl.

There are
a few fundamental things that the entry level shooter should expect out of his
rifle, things that I expect out of a rifle. Though the best safety resides
between our ears, I really have little patience for rifles that fire without a
trigger pull. I've tested too many of them and when the problem is so prevalent
as it has been with certain models already mentioned above that it rises to the
level of a recall, I have little confidence left in that company, and even less
confidence in suggesting that anyone consider a rifle like that for themselves
or their families.

Customer Service is, to partially quote VP Biden, a Big Deal. It is a tremendously
important part of the decision-making process in buying an entry-level rifle,
or any rifle for that matter. A boy's first gun is a really big deal, if you
are that boy. There are too many companies that do not have customer service
departments that I can detect. Or, if they do have customer service
departments, they are unable to either answer the phone or return a phone call.
Even the best products from the finest companies can have the odd issue from
time to time. Your first real rifle is an important event and the initial
experiences with hunting and shooting often determine whether you want to
pursue that hobby or just go chase girls. You can, of course, do both. In many
ways, your first rifle is going to be more important than your fifth or
twentieth rifle, and may generate future enthusiasm for or hunting and
shooting, or not. It just makes good sense to rely on companies that understand
this and take pride in what they produce, so you can as well.

Townsend Whelen had a couple of memorable quotes, such as “The .30-06 is never a mistake,” and “Only accurate rifles are interesting.” I'd expand a bit on the
latter, as I think only accurate rifles are fun. If you aren't enjoying
what you are doing, you'll likely find something else to do with little delay.
So, yes, even if the notion is affordability, good accuracy is a desirable trait
of the rifle.

Though many, many components comprise accuracy, there are three areas that run through
the Savage line to assure it. Savage's button rifled, hand straightened barrels
offer World Championship consistency. The same tooling, the same family of
certified materials, the same hand-straightening is a constant throughout the
line. The barrel nut allows every Savage to be precisely headspaced to SAAMI
minimum dimensions.

Those looking for the full-blown performance driven hunting Savage might well
consider the AccuTrigger, Accu-Stock, P.A.D. equipped 11FCNS short-action rifle
that also has satin, higher polished blue. At $656, it is hardly any less of a
bargain based on features and benefits. This is what I was alluding to when
talking about the surgical choices that must be made by engineers and gun
designers when approaching the entry-level price point. Savage has the
technology for better triggers, they changed the dynamic of the entire industry
with it, but in redefining the entry-level rifle, difficult choices must be
made. I'd imagine this was the most difficult choice of all, knowing full well
that no conventional trigger will compare favorably with the AccuTrigger, but
being forced to accept that adding it would inject cost that would eliminate
their ability to offer the Axis at 25% less than anything out there, including
Mossberg and Remington, and 40% less than the S & W i-Bolt and similar failed attempts.

Unlike some folks, I prefer a
detachable box magazine as opposed to a blind box, or even an integral box
magazine so long as it is well-fitted, snaps firms into place and doesn't
rattle. Fully unloading your rifle is easier and quicker, for it is just remove
the magazine and open the bolt and you are clear. Getting back into action is faster
as well, for it is just snap the mag into its well, close the bolt and you have
three shots at the ready. The Axis magazine, in a nod to containing costs, is
very similar to the newer Savage center-feed magazines, with a plastic lip that
locks into the magazine well as opposed to the metal lip that is integral with
the magazine well, not the removable magazine itself in other Savage models. It
appears that the same stock and its integral recoil lug are used throughout the
Axis series. The only modification of the magazine is the blocking off at the
back as necessary, contingent on cartridge to shorten it. Again, this shows the
thought directed at commonality of parts to keep costs down for the consumer.

Although molded stocks can be made economically en mass, multi-cavity molds can be a
very expensive proposition in startup costs. The textured accents are ugly, but the modernistic look of the textured
surfaces combined with the semi-skeletonized bolt handle and the recoil pad
vents do form a cohesive picture that is modernistic but certainly not futuristic.

Discussions about styling bring back the old college days, when we actually used to write
letters, put them in envelopes, with postage and everything. Typical
correspondence between father and son went along familiar lines. “Dear Dad: No mun,
no fun, Your Son.” A postcard came back in a few days from my father. “Too bad, so sad,
Your Dad.” So it goes with the Axis.

I stop by Mom & Dad's house once in a while in the evening on the way back from
shooting. I showed Dad the new Axis and a few of the groups. Dad replied, “But where's my AccuTrigger?” I
agreed with Dad, of course, there is no AccuTrigger. What I offered as a
wondrous solution was for Dad to buy me a new Savage Model 14 in .223, with the
invisible barrel nut, bolt release nested in the trigger guard, a nice walnut
stock with black fore end, jeweled bolt, high luster blue and his AccuTrigger.
Naturally, Dad could shoot it anytime he liked. Dad's reply: “You know, that Axis is starting to look
prettier to me all the time. That's quite a snazzy rifle you have there.”

This may well rank among Savage's greatest accomplishments. For all the young men and
women who never thought they could afford a new rifle that shoots inside an
inch, for all the parents out there that want to get in some range time with
their sons and daughters but thought they couldn't afford it, or couldn't
afford a rifle of any quality or accuracy, the Axis has changed all that. Pick
your choice of the most popular center-fire cartridges in the land, manage to
get fifty bucks into the cookie jar for a month and a half and you have a new
rifle that you can compete in anything with. That hasn't happened for a long,
long time. Now, the family can spent a lot more time actually hunting together,
rather than just hunting for a rifle they can afford. Getting the best rifle
you can afford isn't bad advice at all, unless you just can't afford one. For a
lot of folks, now you can.

Note: In depth reviews of the Savage Model 16FSS Weather Warrior and the Models 14 and 114 American Classic rifles can be found on the Product Reviews page.